They are such fun to watch, although the interviewer kinda did the objectifying thing with Eliza: the clothes-off thing, which I must admit I secretly sympathized with, and then not going for the handshake right away at the end.

Gouda is maybe my favorite cheese, though I can be fickle, but it's best at room temperature - melted on bread? Yech. Joss seemed a little off at the temperature, too. Though he always brings the coherence in some form.

This definitely made me smile. Is it just me or was Spike serious about getting his name from the show? Ok, maybe not, but I still enjoyed the interview. Also...Oh my god, Eliza was absolutely gorgeous. She is stunning and entertaining and enjoyable every time I see her. I'm thrilled she's getting her own show and I'm quadruple thrilled that Joss is making it : )

I agree with the ewwwww comments, talk about a completely chauvinistic interviewer. Did you notice how he asked Eliza the clothes off/stunts/airy fairy questions, but seemed to be almost deferential to Joss.

But you know what they say, Joss brings (or wears) the cheese...the fans bring the whine!

Yep, I agree that Joss and Eliza were great and the interviewer was a bit worrying. Not just the I-hope-you-get-your-kit-off thing and the awkward handshake, but cutting Eliza off mid-sentence twice as well. Also, that autocue intro that while Joss did it, was obviously meant for the interviewer:

"Imagine the perfect date, she can do anything, be anything and feel anything. And when you're done, you can simply wipe her memory clean. . ."

I'm really uncomfortable with that second sentence. It's not all that inaccurate, but it's spinning the show's concept into a dangerous area. I've got no worries about the content of the show (admittedly only because it's Joss) because these issues will be addressed in a serious way, but I am concerned about the marketing/media approach that will be tempted to go with a more sleazy angle, like the above.

Not on the interview, but on Dollhouse in general. Does anybody know what this means? I was walking in the hills this morning, and found an old flyer for it, then found the same thing online. 15th Anniversary of what? Google is not being friendly.

Looks like a club: Dollhouse Hollywood and Vine. Get your dancing shoes on. And find a time machine, since the event was last year.

On topic, I love the interview. I've never managed to watch much of Spike Feresten's talk show on Fox on Saturday night. His humour is a pretty much of the take it or leave it sort, and from what little I've seen, most nights I can pretty much leave it.

No, bigsofty, Hollywood and Vine was a restaurant/club. It was only a couple of years old when it closed. I'm wondering about what the name refers to, though I agree it probably has nothing to do with the show.